Dan said, âNone of them.'
âAll the same, run a check on all helicopter flights in the vicinity. See if some construction company was maybe trying to fly a block of rock across the city for some restoration job.'
She turned back to Ed Freiburg, âDo you know what kind of stone this is?'
âLimestone,' Ed Freiburg told her. âAnd it's some of the best quality limestone I ever saw. Usually used for building and sculpture, that kind of thing. So if it
was
dropped from a helicopter, this is the kind of stone it would most likely be, if that makes sense.'
Jenna looked around. She hated cases like this. More often than not, they turned out to be negligent homicide, and cases of negligent homicide invariably involved weeks or even months of tedious paperwork and hours of Byzantine interviews with evasive executives and slippery corporate lawyers. Eventually, somebody would pay off somebody else and the whole process would be dropped for the lack of anybody willing to point a finger at whoever had added the lethal chemical to the cleaning fluid, or whoever had left off the safety switch, or whoever had allowed the pipes to rust through, or, in this case, whoever had failed to secure half a ton of limestone to whatever it was supposed to have been secured to.
âI presume the vic was carrying some kind of ID,' she said.
Dan passed her a black leather wallet. She opened it up and saw a photograph of two curly-headed girls about eight or nine years old, one with her two front teeth missing. The victim's driving license showed a serious, slightly overweight man with the glassy-eyed look of a contact-lens wearer. His name was Steven Caponigro, and he lived at 4414 Buttonwood Avenue, Maple Shade Township, across the river in New Jersey.
âNo relation to Tony “Bananas” Caponigro, I suppose?' asked Jenna, but then she answered her own question. âHighly unlikely, if he was living in Maple Shade Township.'
She took a business card out of his wallet. It told her that Steven Caponigro was senior manager of Maple Shade Realtors.
âCan't see anybody deliberately wanting to flatten this poor guy. Not unless he'd sold them some overpriced dump that turned out to be riddled with dry rot.'
âYou want to talk to any of the witnesses?' Dan asked her. âI've asked them to wait, in case you did.'
Jenna shook her head. âYou can let them go. It's pretty obvious what happened here, even if it isn't explicable.'
As she circled slowly around the body, she noticed the heavy side door of the convent open up. There was a pause, and then one of the Holy Spirit Adoration Sisters stepped out, dressed in the distinctive rose-colored habit that had earned them the nickname of the Pink Sisters.
The nun hesitated for a moment, and then half-lifted her right hand, as if she were trying to attract Jenna's attention without appearing too obvious.
Jenna said, âOK, Dan, want to follow up that helicopter thing? Try talking to Stuart What's-his-face at Columbia Heavy Lift Helicopters.'
âStuart What's-his-face?'
âJust ask to speak to the skinny guy who laughs like Pee-Wee Herman. They'll know who you mean.'
She maneuvered her way through the assembled police officers and CSIs and walked across the paved area until she reached the convent door. The nun waited for her. As she approached, she lowered her hand and said, âAre you a detective?'
Jenna tugged out her badge. âDetective Jenna Pullet, Sister. Did you have something you wanted to tell me?'
The Pink Sister nodded. She was in her late thirties, maybe thirty-seven or thirty-eight, with a face so pale that it was almost ivory. She wore rimless spectacles and her eyebrows were dark and unplucked â yet in a strange, asexual way, she was beautiful, like a medieval painting of a saint, either male or female.
âI felt something,' she said, with the slightest of lisps.
âYou felt something? What do you mean? You felt it when that rock hit the sidewalk? I'm not surprised. It weighed close to a thousand pounds.'
âNo. I felt something before it fell.'
â
Before
it fell?'
âIt was during our Eucharistic celebration. We have one every morning at seven. While we were praying in the chapel I felt something pass overhead.'
âI get it. Like a helicopter, or an airplane, something like that?'
The nun shook her head. âIt made no sound. It passed overhead like a shadow passing over the sun, that's the only way that I can describe it.'
âDid you actually see it?'
âNo. It was a feeling, that's all. Dark, and cold, and very evil-hearted.'
âWhat's your name, Sister?' Jenna asked her.
âSister Mary Emmanuelle.'
âHow long have you been a Pink Sister, Mary?'
âSeventeen years this September tenth.'
âSo for seventeen long years you've been shut up in this convent, praying? I mean, like, this is a very closed community, so far as I understand it? You don't get out much.'
âWe do live a cloistered life, yes. We devote our days and our nights to listening to the Word of God and to keeping a prayerful vigil on behalf of the entire world. But I hope you're not trying to suggest that my years of seclusion have made me susceptible to delusions.'
âNo, no. I'm not suggesting that for a second. Or, I don't know. Maybe I am. It's pretty hard for me to understand how you can spend all day every day praying. I'm a Catholic, too, Sister, but I have to confess that there's a limit to how much praying I can do before I start to feel seriously prayed out. My knees won't take it, either, not these days.'
She paused, and then she asked, âDid any of your fellow sisters experience this same feeling? This cloud passing over the sun?'
Sister Mary Emmanuelle shook her head again. âIf they did, none of them spoke of it.'
âOK . . . so what do
you
think it was? Do you have any kind of explanation for it? Maybe it was intuition? Or maybe a cloud really
did
pass over the sun and the chapel physically went colder and darker and for some reason it gave you the heebie-jeebies?'
âI have no explanation for it,' Sister Mary Emmanuelle admitted. âI felt it, and I felt that it was cold and ugly and ill-intentioned. But only seconds later it fell out of the sky and killed that poor man, and that's why I thought it important for me to tell you what I felt.'
âExcuse me?' said Jenna. âYou said “cold and ugly and ill-intentioned”. It was a half-ton lump of rock, that's all. How could a half-ton lump of rock be ill-intentioned?'
Sister Mary Emmanuelle frowned over Jenna's shoulder toward the fragments of limestone scattered across the pavement.
âIt was a living thing, Detective. A creature.'
âA creature? What kind of a creature, exactly?'
âI'm sorry. Please â forget it. I shouldn't have bothered you.'
âNo, Mary. I don't think that at all. Tell me what kind of a creature. Please.'
Sister Mary Emmanuelle's eyes darted from side to side behind her rimless spectacles as if they were trapped. âI can't,' she said. âI should never have mentioned it. To believe in evil is to give it life.'
âMary â evil is alive and well whether we believe in it or not. I come across evil every day of my life and some of it is totally unbelievable. But it still exists, and all I can do is try to stamp it out.'
Sister Mary Emmanuelle covered her face with both hands. When she spoke, she spoke so quietly that Jenna had to tilt her head toward her to hear what she was saying.
âIt had a face like a demon, ugly beyond all description, with bulging eyes and horns. It had a hunched back and leathery wings. Instead of feet it had claws.'
She hesitated for a moment, and then she lowered her hands.
Jenna said, âYou told me you didn't see it.'
âI didn't see it. That was what I felt.'
âYou felt bulging eyes and horns? You felt claws instead of feet? I don't understand what you're saying. How do you
feel
claws instead of feet?'
âYou think I'm hysterical. You think I've been shut up in this convent for too long. You think I've been looking at too many illustrations of hell.'
Jenna didn't know how to answer that. She patted Sister Mary Emmanuelle on the shoulder and said, âOK, Mary . . . thanks for talking to me. I know where to find you if I need to ask you any more questions, don't I?'
âYou don't believe me,' said Sister Mary Emmanuelle.
âOf course I believe you. Jesus, you're a nun.'
âI felt it pass overhead. I felt its coldness. I felt its malevolence. I saw it clearly in my mind's eye. I promise you in the name of Our Lord that I am telling you the truth.'
âAnd like I said, Mary, I believe you.'
Jenna left Sister Mary Emmanuelle at the convent door and walked back to the victim. The crime scene investigators were taking photographs now, and with each flash of their cameras his body seemed to twitch, as if he wasn't quite dead yet.
âAnything?' asked Ed Freiburg, nodding his head toward Sister Mary Emmanuelle.
âAre you kidding me? I think too much adoration has gone to her head.'
âWell, we'll catalog all of the pieces and that should give us some idea of how high this rock was dropped from. Maybe that should give us some idea of
what
it was dropped from, and how.'
âOK. I'm going to drive over to Maple Shade and talk to this unlucky bastard's nearest and dearest. After that I'll be back at the district.'
One of the CSIs called out, âEd! Take a look at this!' She was holding up a piece of limestone and turning it this way and that.
Ed went over to see what she wanted, and Jenna followed him. Although one side of the stone was broken and rough, the other side was evenly rippled and smooth, as if it had been fashioned to look like a fold of material.
Jenna took it and examined it. âThis has definitely been carved,' she said. âLook, you can see that it's been chiseled, and then filed.'
âSo our vic could have been flattened by a statue?'
âI don't know. Let's see if we can find some more sculpted bits.'
Ed called out, âCan you all take a closer look at these rocks, people, and check if any of them have evidence of carving on them â like this one I'm showing you here!'
Within a few seconds, one of the police officers held up a triangular fragment of stone and said, âHere! This piece has some kind of a wing tip carved on it, by the looks of it.'
âAnd there's a kneecap here! Or maybe it's an elbow.'
âI found a couple of fingers!'
Over the next ten minutes, the officers brought over more and more pieces of stone that bore unmistakable signs of having been carved. Most of the fragments had been smashed so small that at first sight it was impossible to identify what part of a statue they could be, but Jenna knew that once Ed and his team got them back to their laboratory, they would be able to reassemble them and find out what the figure originally looked like. Two years ago they had reconstructed an antique glass vase that had been shattered into more than three thousand pieces.
âRight,' said Jenna, checking her watch. âI'll leave you to it. Let me know as soon as you've got this baby stuck together again.'
âOh, for sure. So long as you give us about three months, minimum.'
She was returning to the squad car when one of the CSIs shouted out, âDetective! Detective Pullet!'
She turned around. The investigator was standing in the raised flower-bed at the side of the convent, more than forty feet away from the point of impact. He was holding up a large gray piece of limestone that looked like a mask that had been broken in half, diagonally. Jenna walked back so that she could look at it more closely.
âScary-looking sucker, don't you think?' said the CSI.
The piece of limestone must have weighed at least fifteen pounds. It was half of a head, with tangled hair and a single curved horn. Its face had one protuberant eye and a snarling mouth.
It had a face like a demon, ugly beyond all description
.
Jenna looked across to the convent's side door, but Sister Mary Emmanuelle had disappeared now, and the door was closed.
âShit,' she said. The very last thing she had wanted to find out was that Sister Mary Emmanuelle might have been telling her the truth.
SIX
Tuesday, 2:46 p.m.
B
raydon was dreaming that he was trying to find his way through a cemetery, just as the sun was beginning to go down. A bell was tolling to warn visitors that the cemetery gates would soon be closing for the night, but he knew that he couldn't leave yet because he hadn't yet done what he had come here to do.
The trouble was, he had completely forgotten what it was. Was it to visit somebody's grave, or was it to meet somebody? Was it to find out if somebody he knew was dead?
The setting sun made it look as if the trees surrounding the cemetery were on fire, and he had to walk with his hand held up in front of his eyes to stop himself from being dazzled. The gravestones cast extravagantly long shadows across the grass, and his own shadow looked like a circus performer on stilts.
He reached the intersection of two lines of gravestones and stopped. The cemetery was on a hillside and there was a hot wind blowing. In the distance he could see a dark gray lake, with dark gray clouds gathering over it, and lightning flickering. He could hear thunder, too, and he knew that God was angry with him. At least God didn't know where he was â not yet, anyhow.
He hurried on. He could hear crackling and smell smoke. The trees not only
looked
as if they were on fire, they
were
on fire. Flames were leaping up and down like hysterical dancers, and the bushes began to sparkle and shrivel up. The wind rose and blew even more strongly, and Braydon suddenly realized that if he didn't move faster the fire was soon going to encircle him, and he wouldn't be able to escape.
Burned to death
in a boneyard,
that would be ironic.